Brighterfuture Privacy Policy

Data Protection Statement for European Union Users

Consumer Privacy for UK Users

1. Brighter future Privacy Policy

This policy explains what information we collect when you use Brighterfutures sites, services, mobile applications, products, and content (“Services”). It also has information about how we store, use, transfer, and delete that information. Our aim is not just to comply with privacy law. It’s to earn your trust.

The Information We Collect & How We Use It

Brighter future doesn’t make money from ads. So, we don’t collect data to advertise to you. The tracking we do at Brigterfuture is to make our product work as well as possible. This includes basic product functions like allowing our metered paywall to work and key features like personalising what posts you see based on what we think you’ll like. So, to give you the best possible experience in using Brightfuture we collect information from your interactions with our Services. Some of this information, you actively tell us (such as your email address, which we use to track your account or communicate with you). Other information, we collect based on actions you take while using Brighterfuture such as what pages you view (including how much of a given page and for how long) and your use of product features. This information includes records of those interactions, your Internet Protocol address, information about your device (such as device or browser type), and referral information (how you got to a particular page).

Disclosure

Brighterfuture won’t transfer information about you to third parties for the purpose of providing or facilitating third-party advertising to you. We won’t sell information about you to a third-party.

We may transfer your account information with third parties in some circumstances, including: (1) with your consent; (2) to a service provider or partner who meets our data protection standards; (3) with academic or non-profit researchers, with aggregation, anonymisation, or pseudonymisation; (4) when we have a good faith belief it is required by law, such as pursuant to a subpoena or other legal process; (5) when we have a good faith belief that doing so will help prevent imminent harm to someone.

If we are going to share your information in response to legal process, we’ll give you notice so you can challenge it (for example by seeking court intervention), unless we’re prohibited by law or believe doing so may endanger others or cause illegal conduct. We will object to legal requests for information about users of our services that we believe are improper.